4.5 Article

Neuroinflammatory and Neurometabolomic Consequences From Inhaled Wildfire Smoke-Derived Particulate Matter in the Western United States

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 186, Issue 1, Pages 149-162

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfab147

Keywords

neuroinflammation; microglia; VCAM-1; neurovascular unit; particulate matter; smoke

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R01 ES026673, R01 ES014639, P42 ES025589]

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This study investigated the systemic immune response and neuroinflammatory consequences resulting from inhalation exposure to wildfire smoke. The findings showed that exposure to particulate matter from wildfire smoke caused neuroinflammation and increased activation of cerebrovascular endothelial cells. Additionally, it led to decreased levels of key neurometabolites and increased pathological amyloid-beta protein accumulation.
Utilizing a mobile laboratory located >300 km away from wildfire smoke (WFS) sources, this study examined the systemic immune response profile, with a focus on neuroinflammatory and neurometabolomic consequences, resulting from inhalation exposure to naturally occurring wildfires in California, Arizona, and Washington in 2020. After a 20-day (4 h/day) exposure period in a mobile laboratory stationed in New Mexico, WFS-derived particulate matter (WFPM) inhalation resulted in significant neuroinflammation while immune activity in the peripheral (lung, bone marrow) appeared to be resolved in C57BL/6 mice. Importantly, WFPM exposure increased cerebrovascular endothelial cell activation and expression of adhesion molecules (VCAM-1 and ICAM-1) in addition to increased glial activation and peripheral immune cell infiltration into the brain. Flow cytometry analysis revealed proinflammatory phenotypes of microglia and peripheral immune subsets in the brain of WFPM-exposed mice. Interestingly, endothelial cell neuroimmune activity was differentially associated with levels of PECAM-1 expression, suggesting that subsets of cerebrovascular endothelial cells were transitioning to resolution of inflammation following the 20-day exposure. Neurometabolites related to protection against aging, such as NAD(+) and taurine, were decreased by WFPM exposure. Additionally, increased pathological amyloid-beta protein accumulation, a hallmark of neurodegeneration, was observed. Neuroinflammation, together with decreased levels of key neurometabolites, reflect a cluster of outcomes with important implications in priming inflammaging and aging-related neurodegenerative phenotypes.

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